Transcript Slide 1

#neighbourhoodplanning
Some
Golden
Rules
Making Neighbourhood Planning Work for Your Community
#NP100
727
Neighbourhood Planning
From the Ground Up
513
178
Designated
Applications
Local Authorities
140
55%
43%
There are 326 local planning authorities (not including county councils)
44
16
Application
Designation
Draft Plan
Examination
3
3
Referendum
MADE
This data was
informally gathered
from internet
monitoring and is
being constantly
updated
First Golden Rule
PLAN POSITIVELY
NPPF
• Planning must be a creative exercise in finding ways to
enhance and improve the places in which we live our
lives…
• Neighbourhoods should plan positively to support local
development, shaping and directing development in their
area…
• Every effort should be made objectively to identify and
then meet the housing, business and other development
needs of an area, and respond positively to wider
opportunities for growth…
• Neighbourhood plans should not promote less
development than set out in the Local Plan…
“I only know two English neighbourhoods
thoroughly, and in each, within a circle of
five miles, there is enough of interest and
beauty to last a reasonable man his life.
I believe this to be the case almost
throughout the country, but each has a
special attraction, and none can be richer
than the one I am speaking of and going to
introduce to you particularly…”
Tom Brown’s Schooldays
Thame
VISION
Thame must maintain
its character
as a real market town
• Continue to feel ‘compact’
• Continue to have a close relationship with open countryside around it
• Retain its markets
• Continue to act as a centre for the surrounding area, not just residents
• Remain attractive to residents and visitors
Thame
“The ten-word Vision Statement is clear, short
and sharp. It provides a good introduction,
from which the more detailed objectives, and
then the policies to support and deliver the
vision, naturally flow.”
Report of the Independent Examiner
Thame
POLICIES
Land allocated for 775 new homes: seven sites and three reserve sites.
Nine other policies on integration of windfall sites, design, provision of
new facilities, etc.
Other policies on Working and Shopping; Getting Around;
Community, Leisure and Well Being;
Environment, Sustainability and Design Quality
But remember: Upper Eden contains seven policies in total.
Neighbourhood planning is a flexible tool.
“Don’t start unless you have a clear idea of
why you need a neighbourhood plan and you
have a positive goal in mind.”
Jo Hawkins, Chairman
www.exeterstjamesforum.org
Second Golden Rule
PUT YOURSELF
IN THEIR SHOES
Does this plan meet the basic conditions?
WHOSE SHOES? THE INDEPENDENT EXAMINER
…regard to national policies…
…general conformity with strategic policies…
…contribute to sustainable development…
…compatible with EU obligations…
The plan you submit for publicity and
examination must be accompanied by a
‘basic conditions statement’ explaining how
the plan meets the requirements.
You can find the basic conditions at
Page 38, Locality Roadmap, or
http://planningguidance.planningportal.gov.uk/
Or Schedule 10, Paragraph 8, Localism Act
WHOSE SHOES? THE VOTER
The referendum question
Do you want Thereborough District
Council to use the neighbourhood plan
for the Whereford area to help it decide
planning applications in the
neighbourhood area?
YES
YES
YES
90% in favour
92% in favour
76% in favour
34% turnout
21% turnout
40% turnout
WHOSE SHOES?
THE DECISION MAKER
WHOSE SHOES?
THE DEVELOPER
Pursuing sustainable development requires careful attention to
viability and costs in plan-making and decision-taking. Plans
should be deliverable.
Therefore, the sites and the scale of development identified in the
plan should not be subject to such a scale of obligations and
policy burdens that their ability to be developed viably is
threatened.
To ensure viability, the costs of any requirements likely to be
applied to development, such as requirements for affordable
housing, standards, infrastructure contributions or other
requirements should, when taking account of the normal cost
of development and mitigation, provide competitive returns to a
willing land owner and willing developer to enable the
development to be deliverable.
National Planning Policy Framework
Third Golden Rule
TO GET A PLAN…
…GET A PLAN
Regulations Timescale
Designation of neighbourhood
area/forum
6 weeks
Pre-submission consultation
6 weeks
Publicity period
6 weeks
Examination
Referendum
28 working days
(56 for a business referendum)